Pubdate: Thu, 16 Oct 2003 Source: Daily Telegraph (UK) Copyright: 2003 Telegraph Group Limited Contact: http://www.telegraph.co.uk/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/114 Author: Ahmed Rashid, in Lashkargah UNEQUAL FORCES LINE UP IN STRUGGLE OVER AFGHAN HEROIN TRADE Only One Man Stands Between The Traffickers A Drug Explosion On British Streets, Reports Ahmed Rashid In Lashkargah A sandstorm without end blows through the Afghan town of Lashkargah. There are no paved roads, no electricity and no running water. Everyone and everything is caked in dust. Yet in the centre of town, at least 8,000 vehicles are parked bumper to bumper - a vast car showroom in the middle of nowhere where buyers can pick up the latest four-wheel drives from Toyota and Mercedes, luxurious saloons and air-conditioned pick up trucks with televisions and video players. Even in the dust storm the car shops have customers - big, bearded Pathan tribal chiefs surrounded by armed bodyguards. These are Afghanistan's most notorious drug dealers and traffickers, who can own as many as a dozen vehicles and buy new models for cash. Ranged against them is a lone, though brawny, American, lavishly funded by the British Government. Steve Shaulis, a bodybuilder, appears to be the only obstacle to another explosion of Afghan heroin on British city streets in the coming months. Until the suicide attacks of September 11, Mr Shaulis had been trading in dried fruit in Central Asia with, among others, the Taliban. Now he is trying to persuade Afghan farmers to change their cultivation habits and abandon poppy growing. Even most aid agencies have abandoned unstable southern Afghanistan and Mr Shaulis is the only westerner still working in Lashkargah, the capital of Helmand province. The British and US governments are funding a dozen or more of his projects because few others are willing to take the risk. In 2002 Afghanistan produced 3,400 tons of opium, the raw material for 76 per cent of the world's heroin. About 98 per cent of Britain's heroin comes from Afghanistan. The United Nations Office of Drugs and Crime estimates that the Afghan opium trade is worth ?12.5 billion a year and earns about ?750 million for Afghan farmers. "This year we again face a sizeable harvest," Antonio Maria Costa, its director, said recently. "A good deal of the revenue raised through drugs goes to the coffers of the warlords and terrorists." Apart from the drug problem, this is a country in the grip of a Taliban resurgence with a barely existent national army or police force. In the next few weeks farmers will need to begin planting poppy seeds for the next harvest. Mr Shaulis, who heads the Central Asia Development Group, said: "Millions of farmers are waiting to see what message is given by [President] Hamid Karzai, the international community and the US military about incentives not to plant poppies." Helmand province is the key to preventing poppy production. In the mid-1990s Helmand's farmers produced 40 per cent of the total crop in the country and spread their knowledge about growing the best poppies to other provinces. Mr Shaulis is trying to turn the tide by persuading Helmand farmers to grow cash crops, processing them to add value and then exporting them. Helmand's farmers could then take a different message across the country. "We can't stop farmers growing poppies, we can only take their arguments for growing poppies away by real alternatives," said Mr Shaulis. Britain has given funds to his group to set up a factory in Kandahar to dry and to sort raisins for export, a project run entirely by women. Sher Mohammed Akhunzada, the governor of Helmand, said: "I need 30 groups like CADG to make a real difference because the world has given us so little aid." The problem is not only financial. The 11,000 US-led coalition forces chasing al-Qa'eda and the 5,300 Nato-led peacekeeping troops in Kabul refuse to apprehend drug traffickers or smash heroin laboratories because it would interfere in tribal conflicts. - --- MAP posted-by: Doc-Hawk